The Eastern Church in the Spiritual Marketplace: American Conversions to Orthodox Christianity

The Eastern Church in the Spiritual Marketplace: American Conversions to Orthodox Christianity

by Amy Slagle (Author)

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Format: Paperback
Pages: 205
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 29 Sep 2011

ISBN 10: 0875806708
ISBN 13: 9780875806709

Media Reviews

Slagle's study is an important contribution
to several fields. It adds significantly to the
treatment of conversion in the sociology of
religion, which has tended to focus mainly on
protestantism and secondarily on Catholicism.
The book is extraordinarily well written and
organized, combining data and theory with an
ease seldom found in academic prose.
--Andrew Buckser, professor of Anthropology
at purdue University and co-editor of The
Anthropology of Religious Conversion


Slagle's study is an important contribution to several fields. It adds significantly to the treatment of conversion in the sociology of religion, which has tended to focus mainly on protestantism and secondarily on Catholicism. The book is extraordinarily well written and organized, combining data and theory with an ease seldom found in academic prose. --Andrew Buckser, professor of Anthropology at Purdue University and co-editor of The Anthropology of Religious Conversion
Amy Slagle's monograph represents the first substantial ethnographic study [on] Eastern Orthodox Christians in America. She focuses on converts to Orthodoxy, presenting a compelling argument that, far from rejecting modernity and the spiritual marketplace in favor of tradition, converts operate precisely within the 'culture of choice' environment.
--Scott Kenworthy, Church History


Amy Slagle's new ethnographic study on the dynamics of conversion to the Orthodox Church in the so-called spiritual marketplace is a welcome contribution illuminating the historian, sociologist, pastor, and theologian.
--Nicholas E. Denysenko, Journal of the American Academy of Religion
Slagle's study is an important contribution to several fields. It adds significantly to the treatment of conversion in the sociology of religion, which has tended to focus mainly on protestantism and secondarily on Catholicism. The book is extraordinarily well written and organized, combining data and theory with an ease seldom found in academic prose.
--Andrew Buckser, professor of Anthropology at Purdue University and co-editor of The Anthropology of Religious Conversion
Amy Slagle's monograph represents the first substantial ethnographic study [on] Eastern Orthodox Christians in America. She focuses on converts to Orthodoxy, presenting a compelling argument that, far from rejecting modernity and the spiritual marketplace in favor of tradition, converts operate precisely within the 'culture of choice' environment.
--Scott Kenworthy, Church History


Amy Slagle s new ethnographic study on the dynamics of conversion to the Orthodox Church in the so-called spiritual marketplace is a welcome contribution illuminating the historian, sociologist, pastor, and theologian.
Nicholas E. Denysenko, Journal of the American Academy of Religion
Slagle s study is an important contribution to several fields. It adds significantly to the treatment of conversion in the sociology of religion, which has tended to focus mainly on protestantism and secondarily on Catholicism. The book is extraordinarily well written and organized, combining data and theory with an ease seldom found in academic prose.
Andrew Buckser, professor of Anthropology at Purdue University and co-editor of The Anthropology of Religious Conversion
Amy Slagle's monograph represents the first substantial ethnographic study [on] Eastern Orthodox Christians in America. She focuses on converts to Orthodoxy, presenting a compelling argument that, far from rejecting modernity and the spiritual marketplace in favor of tradition, converts operate precisely within the 'culture of choice' environment.
Scott Kenworthy, Church History


Amy Slagle s new ethnographic study on the dynamics of conversion to the Orthodox Church in the so-called spiritual marketplace is a welcome contribution illuminating the historian, sociologist, pastor, and theologian.
Nicholas E. Denysenko, Journal of the American Academy of Religion
Slagle s study is an important contribution to several fields. It adds significantly to the treatment of conversion in the sociology of religion, which has tended to focus mainly on protestantism and secondarily on Catholicism. The book is extraordinarily well written and organized, combining data and theory with an ease seldom found in academic prose.
Andrew Buckser, professor of Anthropology at Purdue University and co-editor of The Anthropology of Religious Conversion
Amy Slagle's monograph represents the first substantial ethnographic study [on] Eastern Orthodox Christians in America. She focuses on converts to Orthodoxy, presenting a compelling argument that, far from rejecting modernity and the spiritual marketplace in favor of tradition, converts operate precisely within the 'culture of choice' environment.
Scott Kenworthy, Church History


Amy Slagle's new ethnographic study on the dynamics of conversion to the Orthodox Church in the so-called spiritual marketplace is a welcome contribution illuminating the historian, sociologist, pastor, and theologian.
--Nicholas E. Denysenko, Journal of the American Academy of Religion

Slagle's study is an important contribution to several fields. It adds significantly to the treatment of conversion in the sociology of religion, which has tended to focus mainly on protestantism and secondarily on Catholicism. The book is extraordinarily well written and organized, combining data and theory with an ease seldom found in academic prose.
--Andrew Buckser, professor of Anthropology at Purdue University and co-editor of The Anthropology of Religious Conversion

Amy Slagle's monograph represents the first substantial ethnographic study [on] Eastern Orthodox Christians in America. She focuses on converts to Orthodoxy, presenting a compelling argument that, far from rejecting modernity and the spiritual marketplace in favor of tradition, converts operate precisely within the 'culture of choice' environment.
--Scott Kenworthy, Church History

Author Bio

Amy Slagle is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at the University of Southern Mississippi.